A Companion to Health and Medical Geography 2009
DOI: 10.1002/9781444314762.ch4
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Doubting Dualisms

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…In 2012 there might well be scholars who still hold opposing views and visions on the sub‐discipline, but they are certainly not reflected in exchanges along such fundamental lines as the mid 1990s. Indeed, the sub‐discipline seems to have developed along the lines later mentioned by Kearns (1995) and Rosenberg (1998); one of diversity and difference yet with collaboration and inclusivity (for further consideration of residual divides in the sub‐discipline, and their renegotiation, see Dorn et al. 2010; Mayer 2010).…”
Section: Arguments On Sub‐disciplinary Directions and Progressmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In 2012 there might well be scholars who still hold opposing views and visions on the sub‐discipline, but they are certainly not reflected in exchanges along such fundamental lines as the mid 1990s. Indeed, the sub‐discipline seems to have developed along the lines later mentioned by Kearns (1995) and Rosenberg (1998); one of diversity and difference yet with collaboration and inclusivity (for further consideration of residual divides in the sub‐discipline, and their renegotiation, see Dorn et al. 2010; Mayer 2010).…”
Section: Arguments On Sub‐disciplinary Directions and Progressmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While Medical geography focused on spatial and ecological aspects of health and health care, the geography of health -in Kearns suggestion -sought to develop a focus on the dynamic relationship between health and place. This dualism between medical and health geography has been critically discussed and limitations of such an approach have been highlighted (see Dorn et al, 2010). I do not want to reify the somewhat artificial and counterproductive distinction here.…”
Section: From Medical To Health Geographymentioning
confidence: 99%